The Associated Press LDL&F Album Review
John Mellencamp's dark new CD offers a change of pace for rocker
Induction into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame apparently incited John Mellencamp
to obsess on mortality. He responds with "Life, Death, Love and Freedom," the
most somber album of his 32-year career, offering bass-heavy, rumbling blues and
dark-hued acoustic stomps that explore death, relationships and the dark clouds
hovering over such ongoing concerns as liberty, equality and peaceful
coexistence.
Working for the first time with veteran producer T Bone Burnett, Mellencamp
moves away from the anthemic roots-rock and Midwestern soul music he's built his
reputation on. Burnett envelops him in the same misty, reverberating twang used
so well on Robert Plant and Alison Krauss' "Raising Sand." But Mellencamp uses
that sound for an album of midnight ramblings that are less playful and more
ominous.
The core songs address death directly: "Sometimes you get sick, and you don't
get better," he sings in the opening "Longest Days." "If I Die Sudden" features
lyrics as blunt as its title, while "A Ride Back Home" asks Jesus to deliver him
once he's gone. Another song, "Don't Need This Body," starts with "This getting
older ain't for cowards," then bemoans that he and his friends won't be around
much longer.
Not everything is so bleak: "A Brand New Song" acknowledges life's difficulties
while saying we all must work to find the best in ourselves and others, while
"For The Children" is a prayer for a future of less suffering and more humanity
- after he's gone, of course.
Check out this track: "My Sweet Love," the album's one true upbeat tune, is a
paean to the enduring spirit and connection to his wife, photographer and model
Elaine Mellencamp, set to a Buddy Holly beat and sung as a duet with Karen
Fairchild of Little Big Town.
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